This white resin figure, which looks like sculpted marble but was cast directly from the body of a young Londoner, represents Jesus at the climactic moment of his presentation to the mob in Jerusalem: "Then Jesus came forth, wearing the crown of thorns, and the purple robe. And Pilate saith unto them, Behold the man (Ecce homo)!" (John 19:5).

The sculpture was first displayed on a plinth in London's Trafalgar Square in July 1999. There was something almost mystical or revelatory about the unveiling of the contemplative work in this busy spot. For a moment, unintentionally reenacting a mythical scene, passersby became part of the murmuring crowd in the two thousand-year-old drama. Dwarfed by its base, the naked, beaten, downcast figure seemed cut off from this world, hands tied behind his back, head shaven, closed eyes looking inward. Moreover, the contrast between the sculpture and the cultural and national monuments of the British Empire that epitomize Trafalgar Square made a political and social statement. Wallinger's work defends the pure and the meek as it indicts our repression of the Other and the double standards of modern society. It is interesting to compare the feelings awakened by his work with those that the tortured figure of Christ on his cross was meant to evoke in Christian believers.